Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 28, 1948, Page 7, Image 7

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    Sunlight Sing
Will Complete
May 7-9 Event
Climaxing the 1948 Junior Week
end will be the sunlight serenade
scheduled to begin at 3 p. m. May
9 in the open air auditorium behind
the music school.
One of the few events of Junior
Weekend which is directed particu
larly to parents, the program will
feature the winners of the all
campus sing, the University Sing
ers, and instrumental and vocal
solos.
Chairman of the sunlight seren
ade is Kit Wilhelm, junior in Jour
nalism. Assisting her will be Sam
McRinney, in charge of promotion,
Ed Peterson, sophomore in liberal
arts, and Georgene Shanklin,
freshman in music. Arrangements
are being made in co-operation
with Donald Allton, assistant pro
fessor of music.
Refreshments will be served at
this function which attracted over
500 people last year, Miss Wil
helm said.
Dean to Tell Life
Of Matthew Deady
Dean George S. Turnbull of the
journalism school will be inter
viewed by KOIN's Art Kirkham
this Thursday evening at 7:30 on
the Northwest Neighbors show as
part of a program sketching the
life of Oregon pioneer Matthew P.
Deady.
f Deady, for whom Deady hall is
named, was chairman of the first
board of regents of the University
and took an active part in backing
and promoting the University of
Oregon. He died in 1893 after serv
ing 30 years on the federal bench in
Oregon.
Dean Turnbull will tell of Dea
dy’s newspaper connections in Ore
gon as backer of an early political
paper in Salem and as correspon
dnet for the San Francisco Chroni
cle during the Civil War.
For
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WORLD HEADLINES
By United Press
WASHINGTON, April 27—(UP)
—The senate armed services com
mittee voted today to start work
on combined draft and universal
training legislation.
The proposed bill would call up
161,000 youths each year for 12
months of training. They would be
from 18 to 19% years old. it also
would draft 190,000 men between
19!£ and 25 for two-year army
terms.
But at the same time the idea of
combining the draft and UMT met
strong opposition in the house.
Chairman Walter G. Andrews of
the house armed services com
mittee said his group agreed to
day that plans to work the two in
together are “out of the question.”
CHICAGO. April 27—(UUP) —
Eight inter-church groups repres
e n t i n g 45,000,000 Protestants
throughout the country have
agreed tentatively to join forces in
a new National Council of churches
it was announced today.
An administrative committee re
presenting the organiation, which
includes the Federal Council of
Churches of Christ, said the pro
posed merger now is being sub
Poetry Contest
Opens to DO
Entries are now being received
in the annual poetry competitions
sponsored by the English depart
ment of the University, according
to Philip W. Souers, head of the de
partment.
Entries should be left with the
secretary of the English depart
ment by noon Saturday.
Prizes awarded are the Julia
Burgess poetry prize of $25 for up
per division students, and the Wal
ter E. Kidd poetry prize of $15 for
lower division students. The contest
is designed to encourage excellence
in the field of poetry, and is open
to all regularly enrolled students
of the University.
The right of withholding either
prize if, in the opinion of the judg
es, no suitable work is received is
reserved by them. Judges for the
contest are E. G. Moll, professor of
English; Dr. Frank Black, asso
ciate-professor of English, and Al
ice H. Ernst, associate professor of
English, chairman.
There are no restrictions as to
subject matter, but if short lyrics
are submitted as a unit, not more
than five or less than three should
be entered.
Material should be typed in trip
licate and enclosed in a manila en
velope marked outside with the ti
tles of entries and for which award
intended.
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mitted to member churches for
ratification.
Heads of the eight groups met
in Chicago recently and formulated
a two-year plan for putting the un
ification plan into effect. The new
Council of Churches would bring
“a unity of action and avoid du
plication of effort,” a spokesman
said.
ROME, April 27—(UP)—Italian
Communists charged today that
premier Alcide De Gasperi wanted
arms from America to pursue a
“war policy.”
The charge was based on an in
terview between De Gasperi and
Hugh Baillie, president of the Un
ited Press, which was displayed
prominently by all the Italian
press for the second day with the
Rightists opposing an extreme
Leftist claim that the interview
disclosed the Catholic govern
ment's aims toward a military al
liance with the west.
The Communist newspaper Un
ita headlined its report on the De
Gasperi interview, “De Gasperi
asks Americans for arms in ‘active
participation in war bloc.”
The left wring socialist organ
Avanti said De Gasperi had re
vealed a Catholic party program
which allegedly was hidden from
the voters before the elections.
PHILADELPHIA Wednesday,
April 28—(UP)—Harold E. S'tas
sen held a sizeable lead today over
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New
York and favorite son Sen. Edward
Martin in Pennsylvania’s Republi
can presidential primary.
Returns from the write-in voting
in 3,633 of the state’s 8,249 pre
cincts gave Stassen 29,061 Dewey
19,667; Martin 14,793; Sen. Robert
A. Taft 5,212; Sen. Arthur H. Van
denberg 3,324; Dwight D. Eisen
hower 1,645; Gen. Douglas Mac
Arthur 1,961; Gov. Earl Warren
247, and Congressman Joseph W.
Martin, Jr., 311.
Junior Weekend
Probably Raining
Not one absolutely clear day
this month—.41 inches of rain
over normal already—precipita
tion on all but three days of
April; that’s what R. B. Graves
saw on his weather bureau charts
at the Eugene airport Tuesday
afternoon.
With Junior Weekend ten days
away, Graves could only say
“There is a fair chance of fair
weather. But,” he added, “there
is always lots of rain in April.”
Besides too much rain, the
weather bureau reported an av
erage temperature “quite a bit
lower than usual.” So far this
month, there have been 18 days
cooler than the normal 50.9 or 51
degrees.
The lover of puzzles has fun these
days with crosswords and with
wondering how much smaller the
paper napkins will get to be.
State of the nation may be
judged from the demand that there
should be more catastrophe insur
ance.
Veterans'Forms
Available Now
Unless veterans attending- the
University of Oregon under PL 346
notify the veterans administration
within 30 days before the end of
spring term that they do not want
to take leave, the VA automatical
ly will place them on 15 days’ leave,
if they do not return for the first
session of summer school.
VA explained that veterans in
these schools are placed on subsist
ence rolls from the date of enroll
ment until 15 days after the close
of the term.
A veteran placed on 15 days’
leave will receive subsistence al
lowances for that period. His period
of training at government expense
I I I
Ad Staff
Day Manager:
SALLY WALLER
Assstant Manager:
ANDY MOORE
Out-Trotters:
LESLIE TOOZE
ALICIA PETERS
Uptown: 1
DONNA MARY BRENNAN
NANCY CHAMBERLAIN
will be reduced by 15 days.
Veterans who do not want their
entitlement so reduced should no
tify VA to that effect. VA forma
to be used by veterans to signify
that they do not want the leave
are available in room 206, Emerald
hall.
I I 1
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